Francis Xavier Seelos, one of 12 children born to Mang and Frances
Schwarzenbach Seelos, entered the world on January 11, 1819, in Füssen (Bavaria,
Germany). He was baptized on the same day in the parish church of Saint Mang
where his father, after having been a textile merchant, would, in 1830, become
the sacristan.
Having completed his primary education in 1831, he expressed a desire to become
a priest and, with the encouragement of his Pastor, he attended middle school at
the Institute of Saint Stephen in Augsburg. Receiving his diploma in 1839, he
went on to the University in Munich, Bavaria, where he completed his studies in
Philosophy.
He then began to study theology in preparation to enter the seminary where he
was admitted on September 19, 1842.
It was during this time that through his acquaintance with the missionaries of
the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, he came to know both the charism of
the Institute, founded to evangelize the most abandoned, and its apostolic works,
especially those among the immigrants in the United States of America.
Moved by a profound apostolic zeal and deeply touched by the letters published
in the Catholic newspaper Sion, from the Redemptorist missionaries describing
the lack of spiritual care for the thousands of German speaking immigrants,
Seelos decided to enter the Congregation, asking to be allowed to work as a
missionary in the United States.
Receiving the necessary approval on November 22, 1842, he sailed the following
March 17, from the port of Le Havre, France, arriving in New York on April 20,
1843.
On December 22, 1844, after having completed his theological studies and
novitiate, Seelos was ordained a Priest in the Redemptorist Church of St. James
in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.
A few months after his ordination, he was transferred to St. Philomena's Parish
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he remained nine years. His first six years
there were spent as assistant pastor with St. John Neumann, who was also the
superior of the Redemptorist community. The remaining three years, Francis
Seelos served as superior of that same community. It was during these years that
he was appointed Master of Novices for the Redemptorists.
In addition to his work as assistant pastor, Seelos, together with Neumann,
dedicated himself to preaching missions. Regarding his relationship with St.
John Neumann, Seelos said: "He has introduced me to the active life"
and, "he has guided me as spiritual director and confessor".
His availability and innate kindness in understanding and responding to the
needs of the faithful, quickly made him well known as an expert confessor and
spiritual director so much so that people came to him even from neighboring
towns.
In both Baltimore and Pittsburgh, Seelos made Confession become, rather than a
torment, the locus of a life-giving experience of an encounter with Christ
Patient and Merciful. His confessional was open to all: "I hear confessions
in German, English, French, of Whites and of Blacks".
The faithful described him as the missionary with the constant smile on his lips
and a generous heart, especially towards the needy and the marginalized.
It is no coincidence that in Pittsburgh, after his death, the people began to
attribute to his intercession many favors received.
Faithful to the Redemptorist charism, he practiced a simple life style and a
simple manner of expressing himself. The themes of his preaching, rich in
biblical content, were always heard and understood even by the simplest people.
A constant endeavor in his pastoral activity was instructing the little children
in the faith. He not only favored this ministry, he held it as fundamental for
the growth of the Christian community in the Parish.
In 1854, he was transferred from Pittsburgh, to a number of cities in the state
of Maryland: Baltimore, then Cumberland in1857, and to Annapolis (1862), all the
while engaged in Parish ministry.
In Cumberland and Annapolis, he also served in the formation of future
Redemptorists as Prefect of Students. Even in this post, he was true to his
character remaining always the kind and happy pastor, always prudently attentive
to the needs of his students and conscientious of their doctrinal formation.
Above all, he strove to instill in these future Redemptorist missionaries the
enthusiasm, the spirit of sacrifice and apostolic zeal for the spiritual and
temporal welfare of the people.
In 1860, His Excellency Michael O'Connor, Bishop of Pittsburgh, upon leaving his
diocese, recommended Father Seelos as the Priest most qualified to succeed him.
Francis Seelos wrote Pope Paul IX explaining his inadequacy to accept such a
responsibility and asking " to be liberated from this calamity". He
was overjoyed when another Priest was named Bishop of Pittsburgh.
Following the outbreak of the Civil War in the United States, new laws were
enacted in 1863 which required every able bodied male to make himself available
for military duty. Seelos, as Superior of the Redemptorist seminary, traveled to
Washington to meet with President Abraham Lincoln and ask him to exempt the
Redemptorist seminarians from military service. Lincoln, according to Seelos
himself, was not only extremely receptive of the petition, but promised to do
everything in his power to bring it about. In fact, the students were exempted
from going off to war.
Relieved from his office as Prefect of Students because, according to a zealous
confrere, he was too obliging and not severe enough with the seminarians, from
1863 to 1866 he dedicated himself to the life of an itinerant missionary
preaching in English and German in the states of Connecticut, Illinois,
Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and
Wisconsin.
After a brief period of parish ministry in Detroit, Michigan, he was assigned in
1866 to the Redemptorist community in New Orleans, Louisiana. Here also, as
pastor of the of the Assumption, he was known as a pastor who was joyously
available to his faithful and singularly concerned for the poorest and the most
abandoned. As in other cities, his prayers were considered very powerful in
obtaining favors from God.
In God's plan, however, his ministry in New Orleans was destined to be brief. In
the month of September, exhausted from visiting and caring for the victims of
Yellow Fever, he contracted the dreaded disease. After several weeks of
patiently enduring his illness, he passed on to eternal life on October 4, 1867,
at the age of 48 years and 9 months.